The
failure of US journalism
from a
special report on "Changing Face of Iraq"
Robert Jensen
School of Journalism
University of Texas
Austin, TX 78712
work: (512) 471-1990
fax: (512) 471-7979
rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu
copyright Robert Jensen 2004
posted on Aljazeera
English, Sunday 14 March 2004 3:21 PM GMT
by Robert Jensen
Almost a year after the US
invasion of Iraq, the failure of US journalism is complete.
Before, during and after the war,
mainstream commercial journalists have failed to provide the critical analysis,
independent reporting, and the diverse range of opinions necessary for the
American public to evaluate the Bush administration’s claims about the war.
After the hunt for Iraq's weapons
of mass destruction came up empty, Bush was forced to appoint a commission to
study the "intelligence failures" in the run-up to war.
As journalists pursued that story,
some argued that the press had finally stepped into its role as the proverbial
watchdog on power. But journalists continue to allow officials to define and
shape the news in ways that keep US readers and viewers in the dark, just as
they were before and during the war.
Analysis left wanting
The term "intelligence
failures" does a lot of political heavy lifting for the president, implying
that the false claim that Iraq had WMD is a result of a failure in the
intelligence community rather than careful planning in the White House.
By framing the issue as a question
of intelligence failures, not political propaganda, the Bush people hope to
divert attention from the fact that they lied. Unfortunately, the vast majority
of mainstream commercial journalists in the US fell - or chose to fall - into
the administration’s trap.
The Bush intelligence failures
script goes like this: We have been working hard to protect ordinary Americans
from harm. Based on the information from the intelligence community, we went to
war in Iraq to eliminate a threat to our safety.
Now, after the war, we realize
the threat may not have been so great. But we can’t be blamed for working to
protect America. And besides, the world and the Iraqi people are better off
without Saddam Hussein in power.
Bush wins
With the focus on intelligence
failures, Bush wins the political battle, no matter what the allegedly
"independent" commission he appointed concludes. There can, and likely
will, be admissions that mistakes were made, data was misread, some
interpretations were unsubstantiated.
Perhaps a few mid-level officials,
maybe even the CIA director, will fall on their swords to absolve the
administration. Bush will concede what can’t be denied, but continue to claim
he only had the interests of the American people in mind when he acted.
But what if the Iraq war wasn't the
result of an intelligence failure? What if it was the result of a spectacular
political success - the maneuvering of a nation to war when no threat existed?
The analysis that the Bush
administration fought a war for empire by using an argument about self-defense
is widely discussed in the rest of the world. But US readers and viewers have to
scour the web for alternative sources or go to the foreign press to hear such
discussion.
Independence questioned
The "embedded" reporting
system was heralded by many in the press as a step forward. Instead of the press
pools and heavy-handed censorship imposed by the Pentagon in the 1991 Gulf war,
about 600 reporters in 2003 traveled with US military units and were relatively
free from censorship (officers had the authority to censor in the name of
"operational security" - a notoriously slippery term - but almost
never felt the need to exercise it, given the overwhelmingly pro-Pentagon
coverage).
But embedded reporters were not
allowed to travel independently; once they left their unit, they could not
return. And given the realities of traveling, eating, sleeping, and enduring
combat with soldiers, it is not surprising that the reports of US embedded
reporters largely reflected the point of view of the US military.
There was some excellent reporting
done by embedded reporters, such as William Branigin's 1 April story for the
Washington Post about soldiers' mistakes at a checkpoint that resulted in the
killing of an Iraqi family.
But most of the reports sent back
by those embedded reporters were either human-interest stories about the troops
or boosterish narration of the grand advance of troops, with little attention to
the gruesome realities of war suffered by the Iraqi people.
Embedding
National Public Radio reporter John
Burnett said he was enthusiastic about the system at first, but later described
embedding as "a flawed experiment that served the purposes of the military
more than it served the cause of balanced journalism".
"During my travels with the
marines, I couldn't shake the sense that we were cheerleaders on the team
bus," he said.
While the embedded reporting was
often dramatic, it did little to help people understand the meaning of the war.
For example, a breathless Walter Rodgers on CNN told viewers: "The pictures
you're seeing are absolutely phenomenal. These are live pictures of the 7th
Cavalry racing across the desert. You've never seen battlefield pictures like
these before. What you're watching here is truly historic television and
journalism."
Such scenes were historic
television. Indeed, real-time broadcasts from the front were new. But it was
hardly historic journalism. It was, in fact, mostly state propaganda filtered
through a friendly media that rarely could think outside the framework offered
by the US civilian and military authorities.
No Diversity
One function of journalism is to
give citizens access to the widest possible range of opinion in the society, so
that people can test their own views and come to informed political judgments.
In the months leading up to the war, the US media failed miserably at this task.
On television, current military
officers were typically "balanced" with retired military officers,
while current Republican State Department officials squared off against former
Democratic State Department officials - all of whom shared the same fundamental
assumptions.
Virtually no guests were allowed
who challenged the basic framework of the Bush administration. A study by
Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting noted that 76% of the guests on network talk
shows in late January and early February 2003 were current or former officials,
and that anti-war sources accounted for less than one per cent.
Fred Hiatt, editor of the
Washington Post's editorial page, defended this narrow range of opinion, saying:
"Through much of the fall [of 2002], the debate wasn't really 'anti-war'
versus 'pro-war', as the lopsided congressional vote back then suggests; it was
what is the right way to approach this problem. I think we offered as wide a
range of opinion on that question as any newspaper."
That comment is typical of the
narrowness of the US commercial media. There was, of course, a debate raging all
over the world. There also was a vibrant anti-war movement in the US that was
tapping into domestic anger at, and fear of, administration policies.
Hiatt's citing of the congressional
debate indicates just how limited is his vision; if Democrats and Republicans in
Congress agree that war is inevitable, then why would there be any reason to
consider other opinions?
Hundreds of thousands of people in
the US, and as many as 10 million worldwide, took to the streets on 15 February
2003, to express those opinions. Not only were those people mostly ignored in
news stories, but their critique was largely shut out of the mainstream media's
channels.
Enduring problem
The paradox of US journalism is
that a press which operates free of direct governmental control produces news
that routinely reproduces the conventional wisdom of a narrow power elite.
Coverage of the Iraq war highlights two of the key reasons.
First, the majority of US
journalists are unable to transcend the limiting effects of the ideology of
American exceptionalism - the notion that the United States is the ultimate
embodiment of democracy and goes forward in the world as a benevolent champion
of freedom, not as another great power looking to expand its influence around
the world.
Uncritical acceptance of this
ideology permeates mainstream US coverage; even 'critical' reporting usually
tends to take it as a given.
Official sources
Second, journalists are trapped by
the routines of "objective journalism", the most central of which is
the slavish reliance on "official sources".
This gives powerful people in the
government and corporate worlds (and the intellectuals in the think tanks and
universities who mostly serve those powers) the ability not just to comment on
the news but to define what is considered news and to frame it.
The consequences of these two
forces on news coverage of US foreign policy, military affairs, and wars are
predictable: The free press becomes little more than a conduit for state
propaganda, unable to act in truly independent fashion.
Rather than simply replicate the
Bush administration's framework about the war that both Republicans and most
"respectable" Democrats accept, journalists - if they were performing
their function in a democracy as a critical, independent source of news and
analysis - would have at least considered an alternative explanation:
To deepen and extend US control
over - not direct ownership of, but effective control over - the crucial energy
resources of the Middle East, the Bush administration shortly after taking
office settled on regime change in Iraq.
The events of 9/11 made pursuing
such a war easier, but a rationale was still needed to invade Iraq and establish
a client state. Alleged WMD threats became the centerpiece of the argument, as
administration officials dealt in distortions, half-truths and out-and-out lies
to scare the public.
After the war, the focus on
intelligence failures diverted from key questions: Should the US be able to
prosecute a war of conquest in violation of international law; run an occupation
authority that ignores its legal and moral responsibilities to rebuild the
country it destroyed in two wars and through a dozen years of economic
sanctions; and manipulate the political process to ensure that a future Iraqi
government will subordinate itself to the US?
-----------------------------
Robert Jensen is a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin, a founding member of the Nowar Collective, www.nowarcollective.com, and a member of the board of the Third Coast Activist He is the author of Citizens of the Empire: The Struggle to Claim Our Humanity (City Lights Books). He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.
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